Introductory Guide to
regular expressions

Credits: This tutorial is written by Karen Gayda.
Modified by
JavaScriptKit.com for structure and added additional content/
examples. Please see footnote for more information on author.

Introduction

Validating user input is the bane of every software
developer’s existence. When you are developing cross-browser web
applications this task becomes even less enjoyable due to
the lack of useful intrinsic validation functions in JavaScript.
Fortunately, JavaScript 1.2+ has incorporated regular expressions. In this
article I will present a brief tutorial on the basics of regular
expressions and then give some examples of how they can be used to
simplify data validation.

Regular Expressions and Patterns

Regular expressions are very powerful tools for
performing pattern matches. PERL programmers and UNIX shell programmers
have enjoyed the benefits of regular expressions for years. Once you
master the pattern language, most validation tasks become trivial. You can
perform complex tasks that once required lengthy procedures with just a
few lines of code using regular expressions.

So how are regular expressions implemented in JavaScript? There are two
ways:

1) Using literal syntax.
2) When you need to dynamically construct the regular expression, via the
RegExp() constructor.

The literal syntax looks something like:

var RegularExpression = /pattern/

while the RegExp() constructor method looks like

var RegularExpression = new RegExp("pattern");

The RegExp() method allows you to dynamically construct the search
pattern as a string, and is useful when the pattern is not known ahead of
time.

To use regular expressions to validate a string you need to define
a pattern string that represents the search criteria, then use a relevant
string method to denote the action (ie: search, replace etc). Patterns are
defined using string literal characters and metacharacters. For example, the
following regular expression determines whether a string contains a valid
5-digit US postal code (for sake or simplicity, other possibilities are not
considered):